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The Wishing Well Part 8

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"Yes, one came early in the evening. Then this morning when Mrs. Breen opened the door, she found still another. You don't suppose any of the members of the Palette Club did it, do you? We shouldn't like to accept charity--"

"I'll ask the girls if you want me to," Penny offered hastily. "If any of them did, nothing was said about it to me."

"Maybe the old well granted your wish, Rhoda," Louise added. "You know, folks say it has a reputation for doing good deeds."

The ringing of the school bell brought the conversation to an abrupt end.

However, as Louise and Penny went to their seats, the latter whispered:



"Who do you suppose left that second basket on the Breen doorstep?"

"Probably one of the other club members had the same idea you did,"

Louise responded. "Anyway, the Breens will be well fed for a few days at least."

At recess Penny made a point of questioning every member of the Palette Club. Not one of the girls would admit having carried the basket to the trailer park, but all were agreed that Rhoda should be invited to join the art organization. Without exception, they liked the girl after becoming acquainted with her.

"The mystery deepens," Penny commented to Louise as they wandered, arm in arm, about the school yard. "If no one in the Palette Club prepared the basket, then who did do it?"

"I guess we'll have to attribute it to the old wis.h.i.+ng well after all,"

Louise chuckled. "Let me see your ears, my pet."

"What for? Don't you think I ever wash them?"

"I merely want to see if they've grown since we were at the Marborough place. Why, goodness me, I believe they are larger!"

Before Penny could think of a suitable retort, Rhoda joined the girls.

Curious to learn more of the two Texas men who had arrived in Riverview, they gave the newcomer every opportunity to speak of it. As she remained uncommunicative, Penny brought up the subject by mentioning that two strangers had asked her how they might locate the trailer family.

"Yes, they found us all right," Rhoda replied briefly. "Mr. Coaten came to see Ted."

"An old friend, I suppose," Louise remarked.

"Not exactly. I can't figure out just why he did come here."

Rhoda frowned and lapsed into silence. Penny and Louise did not question her further, and a few minutes later recess ended.

The affairs of the Breen family concerned Penny only slightly. Although she kept wondering why Mr. Coaten and his companion were in Riverview, she gave far more thought to the stone which had been dug up on the Gleason farm. Directly after school she proposed to Louise that they drive into the country and interview the farmer.

"I don't mind the trip," her chum said, "but why are you so interested in an old rock?"

"Oh, Dad thinks the whole story may be a hoax. I'd like to learn the truth, if I can."

Mindful that in the past Penny had brought the _Riverview Star_ many an important "scoop," Louise was very willing to accompany her on the trip.

Four-thirty found the two girls at the Gleason farm in conversation with the old farmer.

"I've been pestered to death ever since that rock was found here," he told them somewhat crossly. "There's nothing new to tell. I was plowing in the south field back of the barn, when I turned it up. I didn't pay much attention until Jay Franklin come along and said the writing on it might interest the museum folks. He gave me a couple of dollars, and paid to have old man Crocker haul it to town."

"I didn't know Jay Franklin had an interest in the stone," Penny remarked. "You say he gave you two dollars for it?"

"That's right," the farmer nodded. "I was glad to have the rock hauled off the place."

Satisfied that they could learn no more, Penny and Louise inspected the hole from which the stone had been removed, and then drove toward Riverview.

"Mr. Gleason seemed honest enough," Penny commented thoughtfully. "If the rock was deliberately planted on his farm I don't believe he had anything to do with it."

"He isn't sufficiently clever to plan and carry out an idea like that,"

Louise added. "Maybe the writing on the rock is genuine."

"The curator of the museum thinks it may be. All the same, I'll stack Dad's opinion against them all."

The car approached the old Marborough place, and Penny deliberately slowed down. To the surprise of the girls, they observed two automobiles parked in front of the property.

"It looks as if Mrs. Marborough has guests today," Penny commented.

"Shall we stop and say h.e.l.lo?"

"Well, I don't know," Louise replied doubtfully as the car drew up at the edge of the road. "We're not really acquainted with her, and with others there--"

"They're leaving now," Penny said, jerking her head to draw attention to a group of ladies coming down the walk toward the street.

The visitors all were known to the two girls as women prominent in Riverview club circles. Mrs. Buckmyer, a stout, pompous lady who led the procession, was speaking to the others in an agitated voice.

"In all my life I never was treated with less courtesy! Mrs. Marborough at least might have invited us into her house!"

"I always understood that she was a queer person," contributed another, "but one naturally would expect better manners from a Marborough."

"I shouldn't object to her manners if only she would allow the Pilgrimage Committee the use of her house," added a third member of the group. "What a pity that she refuses to consider opening it during the Festival Week."

Still chattering indignantly, the women entered their separate cars and drove away.

"What did you make of that?" Louise asked in perplexity.

"Apparently Mrs. Marborough gave them the brush off," Penny chuckled. "I know Mrs. Buckmyer heads the Pilgrimage Committee."

"What's that?"

"Haven't you heard about it, Louise? A group of club women decided to raise money by conducting a tour of old houses. In this community there are a number of places which date back over a hundred years."

"And people will pay money to see them?"

"That's the general idea. Festival Week has been set for the twenty-sixth of this month. During a five-day period the various homes are open, gardens will be on display, and costume parties may be held at them."

"There's only one colonial house that I'd care about getting inside,"

Louise said. "I should like to see the interior of Rose Acres."

"Maybe we can do it now. Mrs. Marborough invited us to visit her again."

"Yes, but did she really mean it?"

"Why not find out?" Penny laughed, swinging open the car door.

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